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SAN DIEGO – Only 12% of 91 patients in Texas allergy/immunology clinics knew how to use an epinephrine autoinjector correctly, and only 7% of 41 patients could demonstrate correct use of their metered dose inhaler with a spacer, a small prospective study showed.
That’s not good enough, Dr. Rana S. Bonds said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology. Her team has begun studying interventions to improve correct use of those devices and "will be sharing that data in the near future," she said.
They asked patients to demonstrate the use of an EpiPen or a metered dose inhaler (MDI) and spacer and scored the patients’ adherence to the EpiPen manufacturer’s instructions or published standards for MDI/spacers.
For the EpiPen, 25% of patients missed one of the five steps for correct use, 18% missed two steps, and 19% missed three steps. "It was fairly alarming" to find that 31% got four steps wrong and 8% missed all five steps, said Dr. Bonds of the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston. (Percentages total more than 100% because they were rounded.)
The most common mistake with the EpiPen involved the final step. "Once they deployed the epinephrine injection, they didn’t hold it down long enough. They were bouncing it off the thigh or whatever body part they thought they should inject it into," she said.
For the MDI/spacer, 16% of patients performed 1 of 11 steps for use incorrectly, 16% missed 2 steps, 21% missed 3 steps, and 18% missed 4 steps. Another 11% missed 5 steps, 5% missed 6 steps, 11% missed 7 steps, and 3% got all 11 steps wrong, Dr. Bonds and her associates reported. The most common mistake was failing to exhale before triggering the inhaler for inhalation.
The study recruited patients from the university’s main allergy/immunology clinic and its satellite clinics. Trainers are available at each clinic, and patients are supposed to see them before leaving with one of the devices, but the findings raise the question of whether health care providers at the clinics consistently make sure that happens, she said.
Younger patients, males, and patients with a medical background were more likely to show that they could use the EpiPen correctly. Being African American or less educated was associated with a greater likelihood of incorrect use. Correct usage rates differed significantly between some of the clinic sites. Factors that didn’t correlate with correct or incorrect use of the EpiPen included whether a family member also used the device, being prescribed the EpiPen more or less than 1 year ago, and whether patients had ever used the EpiPen (most hadn’t).
The number of patients in the MDI/spacer group was too small to permit risk factors to be analyzed, Dr. Bonds said.
Previously published studies have reported that 22% of food-allergic adolescents could demonstrate correct use of epinephrine and that rates of incorrect inhaler use ranged from 50% to 94%, she said. Other studies have shown that incorrect use reduces the treatment’s clinical efficacy, and that repeated instruction increases the likelihood of correct use.
Dr. Bonds reported having no relevant financial disclosures.
On Twitter @sherryboschert
SAN DIEGO – Only 12% of 91 patients in Texas allergy/immunology clinics knew how to use an epinephrine autoinjector correctly, and only 7% of 41 patients could demonstrate correct use of their metered dose inhaler with a spacer, a small prospective study showed.
That’s not good enough, Dr. Rana S. Bonds said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology. Her team has begun studying interventions to improve correct use of those devices and "will be sharing that data in the near future," she said.
They asked patients to demonstrate the use of an EpiPen or a metered dose inhaler (MDI) and spacer and scored the patients’ adherence to the EpiPen manufacturer’s instructions or published standards for MDI/spacers.
For the EpiPen, 25% of patients missed one of the five steps for correct use, 18% missed two steps, and 19% missed three steps. "It was fairly alarming" to find that 31% got four steps wrong and 8% missed all five steps, said Dr. Bonds of the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston. (Percentages total more than 100% because they were rounded.)
The most common mistake with the EpiPen involved the final step. "Once they deployed the epinephrine injection, they didn’t hold it down long enough. They were bouncing it off the thigh or whatever body part they thought they should inject it into," she said.
For the MDI/spacer, 16% of patients performed 1 of 11 steps for use incorrectly, 16% missed 2 steps, 21% missed 3 steps, and 18% missed 4 steps. Another 11% missed 5 steps, 5% missed 6 steps, 11% missed 7 steps, and 3% got all 11 steps wrong, Dr. Bonds and her associates reported. The most common mistake was failing to exhale before triggering the inhaler for inhalation.
The study recruited patients from the university’s main allergy/immunology clinic and its satellite clinics. Trainers are available at each clinic, and patients are supposed to see them before leaving with one of the devices, but the findings raise the question of whether health care providers at the clinics consistently make sure that happens, she said.
Younger patients, males, and patients with a medical background were more likely to show that they could use the EpiPen correctly. Being African American or less educated was associated with a greater likelihood of incorrect use. Correct usage rates differed significantly between some of the clinic sites. Factors that didn’t correlate with correct or incorrect use of the EpiPen included whether a family member also used the device, being prescribed the EpiPen more or less than 1 year ago, and whether patients had ever used the EpiPen (most hadn’t).
The number of patients in the MDI/spacer group was too small to permit risk factors to be analyzed, Dr. Bonds said.
Previously published studies have reported that 22% of food-allergic adolescents could demonstrate correct use of epinephrine and that rates of incorrect inhaler use ranged from 50% to 94%, she said. Other studies have shown that incorrect use reduces the treatment’s clinical efficacy, and that repeated instruction increases the likelihood of correct use.
Dr. Bonds reported having no relevant financial disclosures.
On Twitter @sherryboschert
SAN DIEGO – Only 12% of 91 patients in Texas allergy/immunology clinics knew how to use an epinephrine autoinjector correctly, and only 7% of 41 patients could demonstrate correct use of their metered dose inhaler with a spacer, a small prospective study showed.
That’s not good enough, Dr. Rana S. Bonds said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology. Her team has begun studying interventions to improve correct use of those devices and "will be sharing that data in the near future," she said.
They asked patients to demonstrate the use of an EpiPen or a metered dose inhaler (MDI) and spacer and scored the patients’ adherence to the EpiPen manufacturer’s instructions or published standards for MDI/spacers.
For the EpiPen, 25% of patients missed one of the five steps for correct use, 18% missed two steps, and 19% missed three steps. "It was fairly alarming" to find that 31% got four steps wrong and 8% missed all five steps, said Dr. Bonds of the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston. (Percentages total more than 100% because they were rounded.)
The most common mistake with the EpiPen involved the final step. "Once they deployed the epinephrine injection, they didn’t hold it down long enough. They were bouncing it off the thigh or whatever body part they thought they should inject it into," she said.
For the MDI/spacer, 16% of patients performed 1 of 11 steps for use incorrectly, 16% missed 2 steps, 21% missed 3 steps, and 18% missed 4 steps. Another 11% missed 5 steps, 5% missed 6 steps, 11% missed 7 steps, and 3% got all 11 steps wrong, Dr. Bonds and her associates reported. The most common mistake was failing to exhale before triggering the inhaler for inhalation.
The study recruited patients from the university’s main allergy/immunology clinic and its satellite clinics. Trainers are available at each clinic, and patients are supposed to see them before leaving with one of the devices, but the findings raise the question of whether health care providers at the clinics consistently make sure that happens, she said.
Younger patients, males, and patients with a medical background were more likely to show that they could use the EpiPen correctly. Being African American or less educated was associated with a greater likelihood of incorrect use. Correct usage rates differed significantly between some of the clinic sites. Factors that didn’t correlate with correct or incorrect use of the EpiPen included whether a family member also used the device, being prescribed the EpiPen more or less than 1 year ago, and whether patients had ever used the EpiPen (most hadn’t).
The number of patients in the MDI/spacer group was too small to permit risk factors to be analyzed, Dr. Bonds said.
Previously published studies have reported that 22% of food-allergic adolescents could demonstrate correct use of epinephrine and that rates of incorrect inhaler use ranged from 50% to 94%, she said. Other studies have shown that incorrect use reduces the treatment’s clinical efficacy, and that repeated instruction increases the likelihood of correct use.
Dr. Bonds reported having no relevant financial disclosures.
On Twitter @sherryboschert